%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1302044241000844800&page=1%% Please do not change or remove without starting a new thread.%%[[quoteright:313:[[ComicBook/{{Superboy}} http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/suncrop1_8653.jpg]]]][[caption-width-right:313:When you '''really''' need to dispose of something for good, accept no substitutes.]]

->''SCP-1543-01 is a catapult with an absurdly far length of range, designed in 16xx to meet a common need of that time: launching dangerous and potentially reality-altering objects into the sun. Despite the fact that this was often an unnecessary waste of resources and time, it was often decided as the best course of action.''-->-- ''Wiki/SCPFoundation'', [[http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-1543-j "SCP-1543-j"]]

Have something that you need to get rid of permanently? And it can't be destroyed by ordinary means? Throw it into the Sun (or any convenient nearby star; a black hole works, too). If you have SuperStrength, just give it a good toss. Otherwise, you'll probably have to reprogram a space shuttle's coordinates, or possibly even set it to manual and make a HeroicSacrifice yourself.

Realistically, the Shuttle -- and any spacecraft built to date -- has ''nowhere'' near the thrust needed. You'd have to cancel out the entire orbital velocity of the Earth, which takes roughly twice as much delta-vee as would be required to throw whatever it is ''out of the solar system'', which we have so far only managed to do by [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_assist stealing momentum from Jupiter.]] In fact, if you had the necessary rocket engine, it would probably be easier, simpler, and cheaper to [[WeaponizedExhaust use it as a blowtorch]].[[note]]... if you've got a rocket engine capable of heating to 15 million kelvins, applying 250 billion bar of pressure, and maintaining that output for billions of years, in which case congratulations are in order [[/note]] (Between those two extremes, you could drop it to Earth from orbit without a heat shield.)

But those who advocate throwing things into the sun [[ArtisticLicensePhysics rarely know that]], because they think GravitySucks. Furthermore, even if the object ''is'' tough enough to withstand the sun's power, it's likely that few enemies are tough enough to go after it. Also, RuleOfCool tends to apply.

Compare KillItWithFire.

----!Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime and Manga]]* In ''Anime/DragonBallZ'', Goku disposed of Cooler this way, although he survives and comes back as a {{Cyborg}}. He and his two sons also finish off Broly this way later on (though Broly's body comes out of the other side of the sun with his heart intact, allowing him to be cloned), and in ''Dragonball GT'', Super Saiyan 4 Goku killed Baby this way.--> ''' "Sun, you grow my food... you kill my enemies. You're totally worth the skin cancer." ''' - Goku, DBZ Abridged* This was the eventual fate of the Gundams in ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamWing''. Then in ''Endless Waltz'', it turned out they needed them again. Oops. Now Quatre has to go get them ''back''. [[spoiler:And then once they were finished, they were [[SelfDestructMechanism self-destructed]] and everybody got along and lived HappilyEverAfter.]]* [[spoiler:Damocles]] in the epilogue of ''Anime/CodeGeass''.* May have happened to the destroyed [[spoiler:Deucalion]] and by extension [[spoiler:[[VirtualGhost Alv]]]] in ''Anime/KiddyGrade''. An earlier statement from [[spoiler:Dvergr]] that "I want to be with my girl until the end" was followed by her flying into the ship's ruined bridge to [[spoiler:comfort Alv who was [[NotSoStoic crying and]] [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments calling out for her]]]] - then we saw the ship's pieces being framed by a very big Sun. Still, it's a much more preferable way to go out than [[spoiler:[[FateWorseThanDeath being trapped in the ship's still operational mainframe for eternity]]]].* In the final episode of the original ''Anime/AstroBoy'' anime, Astro Boy manually aimed a rocket headed for Earth into the Sun, but [[spoiler:sacrificed himself]] as a result.* [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] in an episode of ''Anime/KirbyOfTheStars'' where Kirby defeats the giant green-caterpillar-like enemy Poppon this way with the Chef ability. He places the enemy in a huge frying pan and tosses it right at the sun. Only it doesn't fly ''into'' the sun--instead it orbits around the sun, then comes right back to Dreamland as an exceedingly delicious fried dish.** The later episode, "Power Ploy" plays it straight. After Kirby regains his strength, he grabs the snake monster, Red Viper, gets on his Warp Star, and instantly flies to the sun where he proceeds to throw the evil monster into it.* Attempted by the [=McDougall=] Brothers in ''Manga/OutlawStar'' when ordered to destroy the titular spaceship. * In ''Anime/BraveExkaiser'', this is how [[spoiler:[[BigBad Dino Geist]] dies]]. Ironically enough, [[spoiler:he does this to ''himself'' to commit suicide rather than be captured and arrested by Exkaiser as one last act of spite.]][[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]* ComicBook/TheSentry did this to his EnemyWithout, the Void, and it's {{lampshaded}} to a point where he will NeverLiveItDown:-->'''The Sentry:''' I don't throw ''everyone'' into the sun!** His protest does make sense: the Void wasn't the only thing he threw into the Sun, or at least, that wasn't the first time he threatened or offered to throw something into the Sun.** This ultimately happens to [[spoiler:The Sentry himself while in his mortal, Bob Reynolds form]] to kill him ([[ComicBookDeath temporarily]]) after the events of Siege.* The Franchise/{{Justice League|of America}} tends to use the sun as its own personal incinerator. Great for disposing of kryptonite.** In ''ComicBook/DCOneMillion'', Superman puts ''himself'' there. Of course by then he's so powerful, he's perfectly fine with that (better than fine, in fact, since he's powered by sunlight).** Superman's rescue of a doomed sun-mapping voyage kicks off the plot of ''ComicBook/AllStarSuperman'' [[spoiler:and ends with Superman going into the sun to try and fix it, the implications being that this is how he ended up there in DC One Million]].** In ''Comicbook/{{Justice}},'' Superman has [[{{Shazam}} Captain Marvel]] throw him into the sun to kill the mind-control probes that have infected his body.** In ''Comicbook/InfiniteCrisis'', Superboy-Prime got a nice closeup of the solar core courtesy of Kal-El and Golden Age Superman.** Superman also threw the Eradicator (a Kryptonian computer/weapon) into the sun. This annoyed it, and led to it creating its humanoid "Krypton Man" form.** Subverted in ''ComicBook/TheBraveAndTheBold'' new series #7. ComicBook/WonderWoman attempted to dispose of the PhilosophersStone in the sun to keep it from the evil alchemist Megistus. But Megistus ''lived inside the sun''. Smooth move, Wondy.* In ''Comicbook/{{Miracleman}}'' all the world's nuclear weapons get teleported into the sun.* This was how Bizarro dealt with [[ComicBook/BlackestNight Black Lantern]] Solomon Grundy (who was effectively unkillable).* ''Franchise/StarWarsExpandedUniverse'':** In the ''ComicBook/{{Republic}}'' series, this is how Anakin and Obi-Wan ''finally'' kill BountyHunter [[http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Durge Durge.]]** Much later, in ''ComicBook/{{Legacy}}'' Cade sends Darth Krayt's body into Coruscant's sun to ensure that he doesn't come BackFromTheDead ''again''.* ComicBook/TheFlash ran to the sun to toss a statue that was rendering a foe (being fought by Franchise/{{Batman}}) invulnerable into it, reckoning the solar core would provide enough energy to destroy said statue. He used some kind of enormous luge system to launch himself out of the atmosphere and then started bouncing off asteroids. If that sounds weird, we're talking about a guy who can sometimes travel in time by running really fast - that was one of the ways he'd already tried to destroy the statue.* The ComicBook/MartianManhunter does this to his brother.** In ''ComicBook/BrightestDay'' 21, [[spoiler:he does the same thing to D'kay D'razz]].* In ''ComicBook/WhatIf'' v2 #108, ComicBook/SilverSurfer was unable to overcome Carnage's possession. When he regains control for one minute, he suicides this way.* In the French comic ''Jules ou l'imparfait du futur'', the good guys decide to launch a nuclear missile into the Sun, because they could only delay the launching one hour, not stopping it. In the end they can't launch it at all, and they must sacrifice the starship.* Subverted in ''ComicBook/UniversalWarOne'': the BigBad sends a space station into the sun, not to destroy the station but to destroy the sun!* In ''ComicBook/TheTick'', the Tick decides to dispose of a huge monolith by throwing it into the sun, because hey, that's what superheroes do. When it lands about forty feet away, he and [[SideKick Arthur]] decide that's probably out of harm's way.* In the first story arc for the ''ComicBook/AdventureTime'' comic, the Lich plans to destroy the planet (and all life thereon) by sucking it into a BagOfHolding and hurling the bag into the sun. [[spoiler: He [[HoistByHisOwnPetard ends up getting tossed into the sun himself]].]]* In ''ComicBook/{{PS238}}'', the S.I.I.T.S.-9000 is designed to throw things into the sun.* In a short story of ''ComicBook/{{Superlopez}}'', the titular hero gets rid of the energy-eating MonsterOfTheWeek this way. [[spoiler: It backfires epically when said monster ''eats'' the Sun.]]* ''Comicbook/{{Supergirl}}'':** In ''ComicBook/RedDaughterOfKrypton'', Supergirl essentially did this [[spoiler:to ''herself'' to try to get rid of a Red Lantern ring without it killing her.]] It worked.** In ''Comicbook/SupergirlRebirth'', the Department of Extra-normal Operations launches Kara into the Sun as a last resort to help her get her powers back.* Franchise/{{Superman}} does this to [[spoiler:Ganthet and Mogo]] in ''ComicBook/InjusticeGodsAmongUs''. A few years later he does it again, to [[spoiler:Parasite]].[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fan Works]]* In the ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' and Doctor Who fanfic ''Fanfic/MinesOfDragonMountain'', Zeitgeist mentions a (possibly true) tale of a "Dark City of Tambelon" that once tried to enslave ponykind (apparently ForTheEvulz) to the Doctor, saying that they live on the sun now. When the Doctor asks if Celestia killed them all, Zeitgeist says no, they ''live'' [[AndIMustScream on the]] [[FateWorseThanDeath sun now]].* A running joke for FanFic/NobodyDies (it's even mentioned on its page) is that given the ludicrous amounts of damage Angels take before they die, final Angel Tabris will be killed by having the sun dropped on him. It's also a recurring joke for Terrifying Rei Meme Generator images.* [[http://www.fanfiction.net/u/55667/Erico Erico the Superbard's]] ''VideoGame/MegaManX'' fanfics have his original characters making use of small, handheld teleport units to dispose of nukes and other hazardous material, by teleporting them close to the sun, where they'd be drawn in.* Mentioned in ''FanFic/HarryPotterAndTheMethodsOfRationality'', after Quirrell emphasizes that the highly powerful [[EmotionEater Dementors]] cannot be killed by any means, magical or otherwise.--> "Hm," Harry said. "Suppose you threw it into the Sun? Would it be destroyed?"\\"It seems unlikely, Mr. Potter," Professor Quirrell said dryly. "The Sun is very large, after all; I doubt the Dementor would have much effect on it. But it is not a test I would like to try, Mr. Potter, just in case."* In ''WebAnimation/TurnaboutStorm'', being banished to the Sun is shown as one of the possible punishments for murder in [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic Equestria]], the other one being banishment to the Moon. This comes out as a bit of a DisproportionateRetribution for [[Franchise/AceAttorney Phoenix]], giving him a good reason to bring his A-game on the trial.* In PH Wise's ''[[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/7286512/1/A_New_World_in_my_View A new World In My View]]'' (a Series/{{Buffy|the Vampire Slayer}}[=-=]Franchise/{{DCU}}[=-=]Franchise/{{Marvel}}verse crossover) the Sentry decides the best way to defeat a super villain is to plunge her into the heart of the sun. Said super villain is rather unfortunately a Kryptonian, cue the NoHoldsBarredBeatdown.* ''[[FanFic/FriendshipIsMagicTheAdventuresOfSpike Friendship Is Magic: The Adventures of Spike]]'': What Luna does with [[spoiler: Celestia's casket]]. She says it feels appropriate.* In ''[[http://www.tthfanfic.org/Story-30529/Ravanne+Not+In+Kansas.htm Not In Kansas]]'', [[Comicbook/{{Supergirl}} Kara]] suggests doing this with a piece of [[Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer The Judge]]. Once it's complete she changes her mind (on the off chance he'd somehow corrupt the sun) and instead throws him into the black hole at the center of the galaxy.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]* Comicbook/{{Superman}} rounds up all the nuclear weapons on Earth and throws them into the sun in ''Film/SupermanIVTheQuestForPeace''. Unfortunately, ComicBook/LexLuthor attaches a genetic matrix created from Superman's hair to the final nuclear missile, and when Superman throws it into the sun, the result is the creation of Nuclear Man, who Superman then has to fight.* In the [[Film/GreenLantern Green Lantern film]], Hal Jordan [[DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu punches]] [[spoiler:Parallax]] into the Sun to destroy it. This is set up since [[spoiler: they were fighting right in front of the sun, and it was part of Kilowog's [[ChekhovsGun lecture]]]].[[/folder]]

[[folder:Jokes]]* As reported on RussianHumour:--> As a population control measure, the Chinese government has sent 100 million Chinese cosmonauts on a one-way expedition to the Sun. The expedition exceeded expectations, as a further 200 million Chinese ground-control staff forgot to let go of the slingshot at the right time and were hurled up along with the spacecraft.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]* In a ''Franchise/MassEffect'' ExpandedUniverse novel ''[[Literature/MassEffectAscension Ascension]]'', an assassin programmed a ship to fly into a sun, and thus destroy the evidence of the victim's murder.* Disaster Area's spaceship in ''Literature/TheRestaurantAtTheEndOfTheUniverse'' was set to autopilot directly into the sun.* This is a common, but by no means universal, post-death ritual for members of [[Creator/IainBanks Iain M. Banks]]'s [[Literature/TheCulture Culture]], although apparently they have their mortal remains Displaced (i.e. teleported) directly into the very heart of a nearby star.* In ''Franchise/StarTrek: New Frontier'', the crew of the Excalibur tricks an enemy ship into flying into a star.** In the ''Literature/StarfleetCorpsOfEngineers'' series, this is initially seen as a solution to the problem of the ''Dancing Star'', a runaway spaceship. However, the ''Dancing Star'' is a very advanced ship designed to survive inside a sun. In fact, it dives into stars to refuel.* ''Franchise/StarWars'' does this a few times:** Coruscant's garbage system, shown in ''Rogue Planet'', involved a complicated system designed to pitch garbage containers into orbit for delivery into the sun.** The Sun Crusher, an indestructible supernova-causing superweapon which would qualify as a SpaceshipSue if such a trope existed, was captured, shiny and barely used, by the New Republic in Kevin J. Anderson's ''[[JediAcademyTrilogy Jedi Academy]]'' trilogy of StarWarsExpandedUniverse novels. After debating whether to drop it into a sun or a gas giant (the unstated but clear implication of the "a gas giant is good enough" argument being that some of the politicians in charge wanted there to be a possibility that ''they'' could recover it if they later deemed it necessary), they picked the gas giant. Later, when new uber-powerful Force Sensitive Kyp Durron got haunted and went evil, he fished it out using the Force and remarked that he wouldn't have had much more trouble if it had been in the sun. Later it's thrown into a black hole, this time for good.** In the ''Literature/NewJediOrder'' books, the Yuuzhan Vong fleet (emptied of crewmembers) is sent into Coruscant's sun after the Yuuzhan Vong surrender.* Creator/RoaldDahl's ''The Enormous Crocodile'' ends with Trunky the Elephant doing this to the eponymous villain. * ''The Marching Morons'' ends with most of the earth's (by then rather dim) population migrating to Venus, lured by tales of idyllic countryside and delicious ham bushes. Needless to say, the rockets actually headed into the sun.* Creator/AnneMcCaffrey does this in her ''Literature/TowerAndTheHive'' series: all the telekinetic Talents in the galaxy temporarily combine into a HiveMind and throw a giant alien war machine into Deneb. Needless to say, the next alien race that approached humanity did so ''very'' cautiously.* In the ''Literature/YoungWizards'' series, Dairine actually chucks a ''black hole'' into the nearest sun.* The eponymous character in the Creator/RayBradbury short story "Rocket Man" meets an unfortunate ending when his rocket ship malfunctions and flies into the Sun. Another Bradbury story, "The Golden Apples Of the Sun" involves a space mission to retrieve stellar matter from the Sun.* In Creator/VernorVinge's ''Literature/AcrossRealtime'' sequence, people use stasis bubble generators that freeze anything inside a sphere for specified time. So it's usual way to get rid of your enemy that hides inside one by throwing him into the Sun (it's very hard to retrieve such a sphere, but it was done at least once).* Used to dispose of the eponymous device at the end of the early Creator/IsaacAsimov short story ''The Weapon Too Dreadful To Use''.* The hominem community uses this method to dispose of [[spoiler:an orbiting nuclear bomb]] in David Palmer's ''Literature/{{Emergence}}''.* In "Giant Killer" by A. Bertram Chandler, [[spoiler:it turns out that "The People" are rats which have gained near-human intelligence through mutation, "The Giants" are humans (though the latter at least is probably obvious to the alert reader), and the "caves" in which they live are the hull of a spaceship. When "The People" become a serious menace to "The Giants", and voiding the air of the ship doesn't kill ''all'' of them, the last surviving "Giant" sends the ship into a star.]]* In ''Legends of Franchise/{{Dune}}'', when it becomes clear that he'll be killed by Iblis Ginjo's SecretPolice for knowing the truth about the [[GeneticEngineeringIsTheNewNuke Tlulaxa]] organ farms, Xavier Harkonnen chooses to pilot the shuttle with Ginjo onboard into the nearest star. Sadly, this HeroicSacrifice is twisted by Ginjo's wife and [[TheDragon Dragon]] into high treason. Xavier's best friend Vorian Atreides chooses to keep the truth hidden "for the good of the Jihad" and allow the Harkonnen name to be despised and Ginjo to be elevated to martyrdom.* In ''Literature/LilacSphere'' by Creator/KirBulychev, the tituar sphere containing TheVirus is destroyed this way. AWizardDidIt, literally. Bonus points to the wizard for actually doing all the math and tossing the sphere not directly into the Sun, but in right direction to negate orbital velocity, so it will invariably fall into.* ''Literature/UrnBurial'' by Creator/RobertWestall: this is the method by which the Fethethil dispose of their own bodies upon death and also how Theloc disposes of the body of [[spoiler: Postie]] because the ''harka'' he was infected with by the Wawaka is incurable.* Done in a roundabout way in the Creator/JohnBellairs novel ''Literature/TheBeastUnderTheWizardsBridge'': the heroes magically propel the beast's SoulJar and a rivet from the bridge (with AntiMagic properties) into space, and the beast itself follows them, with all three coming down on the [[CometOfDoom Red Star]], knocking it off course and into the sun.* Used as the basis of Creator/DouglasAdams' short story ''[[{{Literature/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy}} Young Zaphod Plays It Safe]]''. Zaphod is ferrying two government officials down to a crashed spaceship that was sent to throw various incredibly dangerous things into a black hole, including fuel rods that mined energy from history, extremely potent bioweapons and explosives, and [[TakeThat a synthetic human whose escape pod was headed for Earth,]] [[{{UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan}} last heard talking about a shining city on a hill]].* In the fourth book of the ''Literature/TheExpanse'' series, Holden disposes of [[spoiler: Detective Miller's protomolecule node]] by strapping it to a reconnaissance probe with a trajectory aimed towards the nearest star. [[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]* ''Series/DoctorWho'':** The Doctor once dumped an evil skull that wanted to take over the world into a supernova to destroy it in the serial [[Recap/DoctorWhoS15E3ImageOfTheFendahl "Image of the Fendahl"]].** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E7AmysChoice "Amy's Choice"]]--->'''Amy:''' Shall I run and get the manual?\\'''The Doctor:''' You can't. I threw it into a supernova.\\'''Amy:''' You threw the manual into a supernova? Why?\\'''The Doctor:''' Because I disagreed with it. Stop talking to me when I'm cross!** In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS6E5TheSeedsOfDeath "The Seeds of Death"]], the humans on board the moonbase send a signal to draw the invading Ice Warriors off course into the sun.* In ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'', Captain Jack dumped an alien invader into the sun as well, while making the timeless ''Radio/TheGoonShow'' joke about how they'd be fine, shouldn't be too hot there as it was night time.** At least he used a teleportation device, not a spaceship.* ''Series/LoisAndClark'': When Superman's clone asks the real Superman to destroy both him and the lock of hair from which he was cloned from, Superman picks him and the Petri dish up and we see them flying toward the sun. We don't actually see anything being tossed into it, but it's implied.** In a variant in one episode, Superman's skin is contaminated with a mass of microscopic radioactive particles that forces him to be in radiation proof containment on Earth. Here, the solution is to fly towards the sun, not to enter it, but just to enter its gravitational field to allow it to pull all the particles at once.*** Which is a really egregious example of GravitySucks, though of course Superman could have simply flown opposite the direction he was orbiting the sun, in order to cancel his angular momentum until only the sun's gravity was affecting him.* In the ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' episode "Operation - Annihilate!", a native tries launching himself into the sun to escape a MindControl plague. Although it works, it only allows him to live just long enough to celebrate being free. However, this provides a vital clue for the successful resolution of the crisis.** It's interesting to note that the episode and the original script that was written in the "Star Trek Logs" books had two different reasons the sun worked: the episode had the parasites vulnerable to ultraviolet light; the script/book had the sun's intense magnetic fields pull the parasite out of the person (which was unfeasible to do to the infested planet, so they just [[EarthShatteringKaboom annihilated the parasites' home planet]]).* Not a sun, but the initial event horizon of a ''Franchise/{{Stargate|Verse}}'' (the big splashy thing when it first opens) can disintegrate pretty much anything. Very handy when disposing of some hazardous ImportedAlienPhlebotinum. In ''[[Series/StargateSG1 SG-1]]'' the team uses a gate to send a local star into supernova (by tossing a gate linked to a black hole into said star), which destabilizes the star into a supernova which obliterates [[spoiler:most of]] Apophis' fleet.* Similarly, in ''Series/{{Farscape}}'', the first real glimpse we get of the destructive power of wormholes is when [[spoiler:John opens one with one end in the middle of a star and the other in front of a Scarran ship, incinerating them instantly]].* ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|2003}}'': This is the final fate of [[spoiler:the Galactica and the rest of the fleet]].* On ''Series/{{Sliders}}'' the Sliders taught an alternate Earth how to build nuclear weapons to defend against a world-ending asteroid. The Conrad of that world is excited about the possibilities of their new atomic age, and when Arturo points out that having a nuclear reactor in every car would generate tons of nuclear waste, Conrad suggests launching the waste into the sun.** Arturo doesn't point out the logistical issues such a task would require (i.e. not nearly enough thrust to cancel out the orbital velocity) but instead brings up the possibility of the launch failing and contaminating the surrounding area with radioactive waste.* When the aliens of ''Series/ThirdRockFromTheSun'' experienced their first Earth holiday (Thanksgiving), Dick said it was like their own Big Giant Head Day except that "[[NoodleIncident no one gets thrown into the sun]]".* ''Franchise/PowerRangers'': ** ''Series/PowerRangersZeo'': Done by the villains to the Megazord early on. Fortunately, the genius Billy has just invented the Zeo Megazord's Battle Helmets, using the Zeo IV Battle Helmet to nullify gravity around it, and then the Zeo II Battle Helmet to rocket them away from the sun. ** ''Series/PowerRangersDinoCharge'': [[spoiler: How three of the core villains are ultimately beaten - after the team goes back in time sixty-five million years, to the day Sledge first came to Earth, the auxiliary Rangers and Heckyll infiltrated Sledge's ship, locked Wrench and Poisandra in cells, then used an electro-net to capture a giant Sledge himself and set the ship on an autopilot course right into the sun, taking the trio and all their captive monsters with it. Of the monsters who'd accompanied Sledge, only Fury is spared this fate, having been destroyed by a bomb while on Earth.]]* In ''Series/KamenRiderWizard,'' the Phoenix Phantom has the power to resurrect himself, immune to whatever killed him last, and even a Rider with eight forms is gonna run out of {{Finishing Move}}s eventually. Worse, he comes back faster each time, and nears total invincibility by the time of their final encounter. What's Wizard to do? [[spoiler: Upon gaining a ''ninth'' form with the powers of the others put together, he Rider Kicks Phoenix right into the sun, where even if he does become immune to the intense heat and pressure, he'll never be able to break its gravity and return to Earth.]] [[AndIMustScream Pretty harsh]], but you can't say it wasn't necessary.-->'''Wizard:''' [[SubvertedCatchPhrase For you, there will be no finale.]]* ''Series/BuckRogersInTheTwentyFifthCentury'' had a second season episode where the ''Searcher'''s crew met some midgets looking for a particular star and Cryton, Buck's unctuous RobotBuddy, tells them that star is regularly used for waste disposal.* ''Series/AgentsOfSHIELD'' shows this is apparently SHIELD's standard operating procedure for scary tech items. The launch facility for this is nicknamed "The Slingshot". [[spoiler:Turns out all they sent into the sun was a lot of empty rockets; the items themselves were secretly deemed too valuable to destroy.]][[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]* At a wild guess, Music/PinkFloyd's "Set the controls for the heart of the sun" qualifies.* The MusicVideo for [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AI1NgFYJCN4 "Bullets", by Tuung,]] depicts a ball of junk, containing the singers, traveling into the Sun. [[spoiler:At the end, unbelievably enough, this is made into an InvertedTrope.]][[/folder]]

[[folder:Pinball]]* In ''Pinball/DoctorWho'', The Master plans to invert this - he'll get the Sun to come close enough to Earth so as to kill [[TheNthDoctor all the Doctors]].[[/folder]]

[[folder:Puppet Shows]]* The ''Series/{{Thunderbirds}}'' episode ''Sun Probe'' inverted this: a ship sent to gather data about the Sun nearly crashes into it. This scenario has been repeated in at least one old text-only story and twice in the recent CGI relaunch, ''WesternAnimation/ThunderbirdsAreGo''.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Roleplay]]* ''Roleplay/DestroyTheGodmodder'' has this used often. The godmodder is fond of throwing players that annoy him into the sun, player's are fond of throwing entities into the sun.** Played with when Aegis took the sun, and then threw it into the altar of power[[note]]To discover that the godmodder had shrunk the sun to a size small enough to not do any damage.[[/note]][[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]* This is mentioned in ''TabletopGame/MummyTheResurrection'' as one of the few ways to permanently destroy a [[TheUndead Mummy]].* In epic level games of ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' this is a possible, though not exactly easy (or [[AwesomeButImpractical effective]]) way of dispatching enemies. The epic spell [[http://www.d20srd.org/srd/epic/spells/nailedToTheSky.htm Nailed to the Sky]] puts the target into orbit, while a combination of the CharmPerson spell (or variants, to turn a target into an ally), the [[FastballSpecial Fling Ally]] feat (to turn an ally into a projectile weapon), and the [[http://www.d20srd.org/srd/epic/feats.htm#distantShot Distant Shot]] feat (to fire a ranged weapon at anything you can see, such as... say... the sun) lets you jump-start the space program.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]* Iris, the strongest summon in the ''VideoGame/GoldenSun'' games, attacks enemies by lifting them up and hurling them into the sun.* The most powerful unarmed attack in [[VideoGame/DisgaeaHourOfDarkness the first]] ''Franchise/{{Disgaea}}'' involves tearing up a section of the ground and shoving it (and the enemies on it, of course) into the sun. The second and further games upgraded it to punching target so hard that it turns into a black hole. Which then explodes.* ''Videogame/FinalFantasyVIII'' ups the ante with the Eden summon by launching your enemies into a cannon and shooting them into the center of a galaxy - and then collapsing it (as in, the galaxy) around them.* In ''VideoGame/UnrealIITheAwakening'', the protagonist eventually sends the central MacGuffin into a nearby star to ensure no-one can ever retrieve it again -- it's proved to be basically indestructible thus far.* ''VideoGame/Prey2006'': when Tommy takes control of the Sphere he destroys it by piloting it into the Sun.* ''VideoGame/{{Super Robot Wars Original Generation}}s'' and ''OG Gaiden''. Leave it to our favorite robot nerd, Ryusei Date, to come up with the most awesome way possible to invoke this troupe, shoot the enemy into the sun with the HTB cannon. He named it "The Heaven and Earth One Shot Sure Kill Cannon" for a reason. The resulting Tronium/solar fusion explosion is so big, it sends a massive shock wave through the whole SOLAR SYSTEM. Then, if you actually killed the enemy, the SRX sits back and watches the fireworks at the end. Plus points if you do this to one of the end bosses 9 times in a row.* This is how VideoGame/{{Bayonetta}} disposes of [[spoiler:[[FinalBoss Jubileus]].]] She [[spoiler:''punches her '''soul''''' into the Sun. From '''''the outer reaches of the solar system'''''.]]* This is the fate of an ancient EldritchAbomination in ''VideoGame/{{Marathon}}''. Better hope nobody goes and [[ApocalypseHow blows up the star]] in the following eons.* In ''VideoGame/TheCrystalKey'', the Arkonians had programmed one of the pieces of their titular key to connect to their system's sun, [[MundaneUtility as a means to incinerate the trash collected from their colony planets]] by dumping it through portals linked to the sun. [[spoiler: Later, when you find this piece, you use it with your Portable Portal, to [[KillItWithFire trick Ozgar into going there]] by forcing him out of his room from sounding the ship's alarm and setting up a flawless hologram of the corridor outside.]]* At the end of ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy'', {{B|igBad}}owser is literally flung into the Sun after being defeated by Mario (and before it explodes and causes the universe to collapse). He does survive later on, however...* A variation in ''VideoGame/SpaceRangers'': one of possible ways to get rid of [[PlanetEater Terron]] is telling him to go and absorb a star. He doesn't return...* Creator/ChuckNorris in ''VideoGame/{{MUGEN}}'' doesn't throw you into the sun. He drops the sun on you for a OneHitKill!* The above mentioned ''Anime/AstroBoy'' example is, of course, re-enacted as the final level of the beloved GameBoyAdvance adaptation, ''VideoGame/AstroBoyOmegaFactor''. In this version you actually have to fly into the sun, dodging chunks of the FinalBoss, AsteroidThicket-style to get a piece of scrap metal containing the AI of Astro's love interest into the sun so she can stop the pieces that have already fallen in from causing a chain reaction that'll destroy the solar system.* ''VideoGame/{{Halo 4}}'' has [[spoiler:[[TheDragon Jul 'Mdama]] doing this to ''Requiem''.]]* {{Creator/Bungie}}'s [[ArcNumber seventh]] step on their plan for world domination is "Take over world. Shoot enemies into the sun with giant slingshot."* ''VideoGame/{{Celestus}}'': One mission ask you to throw garbage into the nearest star, because it is "cheaper than recycling it".* You technically ''can'' pull this off in VideoGame/KerbalSpaceProgram, though it's just as difficult (relatively speaking) as it would be in real life, and attempting to do so in-game will give you a good understanding of how difficult it actually is.* Used as a MundaneUtility in the backstory of ''{{Videogame/Vectorman}}'' to dispose of toxic sludge.* ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'' provides an amusing ''inversion'' of this trope with the champion Aurelion Sol, the Star Forger. He's a TimeAbyss [[StarPower dragon who makes stars]] and ''throws them'' as his main ability for attacking.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Comics]]* In ''Webcomic/KillroyAndTina'', this is Oberon's eventual fate; unfortunately, his super-powers enable him to come back with the full might of whatever kills him. [[NiceJobBreakingItHero Nice job breaking it, Brendon.]]* ''Webcomic/DragonTails'' had a storyline about super heroes, in which one of the characters has an [[http://www.dragon-tails.com/comics/archive.php?date=020103 unfortunate tendency]] [[http://www.dragon-tails.com/comics/archive.php?date=020126 to hurl things]] [[http://www.dragon-tails.com/comics/archive.php?date=020317 into the sun.]]* Bud from ''Webcomic/WapsiSquare'' disposes of the remains of [[spoiler:the calendar machine]] this way in a deliberate, in universe homage to classic superheroes, [[http://wapsisquare.com/comic/sonic-boom/ It is rather noisy.]]* In ''Webcomic/ClanOfTheCats'', the only way to kill {{Dracula}} off for good by having a Christian impale him with a piece of the True Cross. Or you could stake him with a regular cross and portal his ashes into the sun.* ''ComicBook/{{Buck Godot|Zap Gun for Hire}}'' is searching for the stolen Winslow, and suggests that the thief hid it in the garbage barges. When told that it would get hurled into the sun, he responds: "Can you think of a '''better''' place to hide a truly indestructible object?"* ''Webcomic/PennyArcade'' gives us [[http://penny-arcade.com/comic/2011/09/05 Superman's solution to everything.]]* ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'':** In Act 6 Intermission 1, Aradia wants to hold a funeral for the dead trolls, and she suggests that the ceremony should involve throwing their corpses into the nearby Green Sun. However, complications arise and the funeral doesn't happen.** In the alpha universe, Dave Strider made a massive fortune by manufacturing objects with 3-D jpeg artifacts. He made so much money that he could afford to dispose of his unsold wares[[note]]i.e. all of them. No one actually bought Dave's jpeg artifacts--Dave made his fortune because these objects somehow had a ''negative'' manufacturing cost.[[/note]] by rocketing them into the sun.* ''Webcomic/TheNonAdventuresOfWonderella'': In [[http://nonadventures.com/2012/05/05/hair-of-the-dog-star/ "Hair of the DOG STAR,"]] Wonderella fends off an alien invasion by offering the aliens vodka. They get so drunk that they decide, "We shall... ''defeat the sun!''" Then they fly their entire fleet straight into it.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Original]]* The Wiki/SCPFoundation once attempted to dispose of the unstoppable monster known as [[http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-682 SCP-682]] using this method. ''It just made it angrier'' ...and [[InfernalRetaliation on fire]]. The entry where this attempt is mentioned, [[http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-1543-j SCP-1543-j]] is, for the most part, an extended parody of this trope that rarely seems to do much good.** [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nodqxkjzvQ8 Now dramatised in this animation.]]** A straight example would be Dr. Clef's method to dispose of [[http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/termination-log-scp-316 SCP-316-D]] after [[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill lobotomizing]] him.* The ''WebAnimation/ZeroPunctuation'' review of ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedI'' had, as a last line, "Give it a chance, but I can't blame you if you end up trying to fire it into the sun."* ''WebVideo/TheAngryVideoGameNerd'' ends his review of ''VideoGame/{{Superman 64}}'' by flying into space ''Franchise/{{Superman}}'' style and hurling the cartridge into the sun.* According to [[Website/ChuckNorrisFacts internet meme]], once per year Creator/ChuckNorris selects one lucky kid to be thrown into the sun.** In ''{{MUGEN}}'', he does the reverse. He drops the sun on you!!!* As Goku and Superman's WebAnimation/DeathBattle reached its end, Goku attempted to blast Superman into the sun with a Kamehameha. [[spoiler:While he was able to do it, he realized too late that not only did Superman survive, he gains power from absorbing solar radiation and being within the sun further amplified his powers.]] ** In an earlier Death Battle, Thor vs Raiden, the loser's corpse ends up getting flung into the sun as well.** Kirby vs Majin Buu ended with [[spoiler:Kirby spitting Kid Buu's blast back at him and blasting him into the sun, which was enough to eradicate every trace of him and prevent him from regenerating.]]** Segata Sanshiro knocks Chuck Norris into the sun. Being Chuck Norris, he comes out the other side completely unharmed. [[spoiler:However, this causes the sun to collapse into a black hole.]]* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LHvR1fRTW8g This]] ''WebVideo/MinutePhysics'' video explains why doing this is actually harder than it's supposed to be. The video also explains some alternate solutions: either go to the outskirts of the Solar System (where the speed to shed is lower) or use gravitational assists to slow down and/or direct the thing into the Sun.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':** In the "WesternAnimation/TreehouseOfHorror X" episode, Homer and Bart stow away on a rocket that they think is taking humanity's best and brightest to another planet. It turns out they're actually on a rocket full of the dregs of humanity (including notorious celebrities such as Dr. Laura, Dan Quayle, Ross Perot, Courtney Love, Tom Arnold, Paulie Shore and Rosie O' Donnell), and have been launched towards the Sun. Once Bart and Homer realize their mistake, they open the airlock just to make the end come faster.** In "Three Men and a Comic Book" episode, Bart shows Lisa a Radioactive Man comic where he punched Dr. Crab into the sun, followed by RM saying "Hot enough for ya?"** One episode also featured a comic book where a CaptainErsatz of the Hulk kicked a tidal wave into the Sun.** One episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheItchyAndScratchyShow'' has the titular duo pointing guns at each other that get larger and larger until they are half the size of the earth. The end result: Scratchy winds up being shout out of Itchy's gun, and into the sun.* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' had one in "The Farnsworth Parabox" where Hermes was going to throw a box that was a portal to (and contained) an alternate universe into the sun.-->'''Farnsworth:''' Only the nuclear inferno of the sun has enough energy to ensure its total destruction!-->'''Bender:''' I could hit it with a shovel.-->'''Farnsworth:''' That's not good enough!** When Fry arrives in the future in the first episode, Leela tells him that if he doesn't do his assigned job of delivery boy he will be fired... out of a cannon, into the sun.** And, of course, this is the fate of the original big ball of garbage in the episode "A Big Piece of Garbage".** And another:--->'''Fry:''' Aww, can't we just hurl it into the sun and say we delivered it?--->'''Bender:''' That still sounds like to much work. Let's toss it out the airlock, and ''say'' we tossed it into the sun.** ''Series/TheRealWorld: The Sun''--->'''Man on TV:''' (screams) I'm burning to death!--->'''Leela:''' (scoffs) [[FriendsRentControl You know how much an apartment that big would cost on the Sun]]?** This almost happens to [[spoiler:Manhattan]] after an outbreak of a once extinct disease (the common cold).*** Only because they ran out of piranhas. * In ''WesternAnimation/DrawnTogether'', Captain Hero did this to his home planet. Subverted in another episode where he ''considers'' throwing guns into the sun but opts to flush them down a toilet instead.* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/RockosModernLife'', Really Really Big Man tells a boy he's carrying that he'll throw a nuclear missile into the sun, then throws the boy by mistake.* In ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague Unlimited'''s GrandFinale, [[ComicBook/TheFlash Flash]] suggests this to Franchise/GreenLantern when dealing with a giant, towering machine...then feels embarrassed for mentioning it, only to be told that it could work. Even though it "doesn't quite make escape velocity", it's still a SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome for both of them. This may have been an in-joke referencing a 2004 [[http://groups.google.com/group/rec.arts.comics.dc.universe/msg/c0d29c39c2cd9f84?hl=en Usenet thread,]] where producer DwayneMcDuffie responded to a suggestion that the previous week's episode could have been resolved by tossing the menace into the sun: "Our version of Green Lantern can't, Power Rings are no where near as mighty as they are in the DCU. The Darkheart was simply too big and heavy. Although it does suggest a really interesting spin-off, where every week GL throws whoever is attacking into the sun."** In another episode, Hawkgirl makes a crack about [=AMAZO=] teleporting Solomon Grundy into the sun.** Inverted in "Eclipsed" when the ([[DemonicPossession possessed]]) Justice League tries to get rid of ''the sun'' by throwing a MacGuffin into it. After getting better, they throw another one to reverse the effects.** Franchise/WonderWoman gives the frozen corpse of an ancient warrior the ultimate VikingFuneral by launching his longship into the Sun.* ''WesternAnimation/{{X-Men}}'': Jean Grey, as the Phoenix, flies into the sun with the M'Kraan Crystal.* In the ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZim'' episode "Planet Jackers," Zim has to stop a pair of aliens who want to use Earth to fuel their planet's dying sun.** In another episode, the Tallest sent Zim's ship flying toward the sun. [[SnapBack He gets better.]]** In still another episode, Zim was seen experimenting with shooting chickens into orbit with a planned trajectory that intercepted the sun.* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/HeManAndTheMastersOfTheUniverse2002'', an artifact-powered spell is cast from a large tower to turn the world's population into snakemen. He-Man solves the crisis by lifting the entire tower and throwing it into the sun. This is tremendous case of StrongAsTheyNeedToBe as He-Man is called "the strongest man in the universe", but at no other point in the series does he demonstrate anything near ''that'' degree of super-strength.* In ''WesternAnimation/ExoSquad'', that's where the [[spoiler:''human undesirables'']] are sent into by the Neosapiens.* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'', Wendy thinks the substitute teacher has been hitting on her boyfriend, Stan. In response she somehow gets a bunch of Iraqis to arrest her under charges of being a fugitive then shoot her in to the sun. What makes it even funnier was that the teacher was a lesbian with no interest in Stan.* ''WesternAnimation/{{Captain Planet|AndThePlaneteers}}'' once disposed of a huge amount of nuclear waste by throwing it into the sun. He did this semi-frequently, especially with any episode involving Duke Nukem.* In an episode of ''Literature/TheMagicSchoolBus'', they disposed of an asteroid about to hit their school this way. Even though it had plainly taken days for it to reach Earth, the asteroid went from Earth orbit to the Sun [[TravelingAtTheSpeedOfPlot in seconds]] (this was {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d in the phone segment).* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/ShaggyAndScoobyDooGetAClue'' has Dr. Phibes plot to throw a group of octuplets who are more beautiful than him into the sun using a rocket.* In ''WesternAnimation/TheBatman'', Superman throws a lead can ([[spoiler:he thought was]]) containing Kryptonite into the sun.* In ''WesternAnimation/TheRenAndStimpyShow'', Stimpy flies into the sun in "I Was a Teenage Stimpy".** Another example is the episode "The Scotsman in Space" where Commander Hoek and Cadet Stimpy are also burned alive by the sun.* In the première of ''[[WesternAnimation/SuperFriends The Super Powers Team Galactic Guardians]]'', the Superfriends gather all of {{ComicBook/Darkseid}}'s Seeds Of Doom on Earth and toss them in the sun.** Later in that same season, after Franchise/{{Superman}} dies due to extreme kryptonite poisoning (there was a mountain of the stuff), the Justice League honor him by laying him to rest in the Sun. Problem was, Supes wasn't dead, [[GaveUpTooSoon he had merely forced himself into a Kryptonian trance to survive the radiation]], so now they have to get him ''back'' before Darkseid conquers the Earth in his absence.* In the ''WesternAnimation/SupermanTheAnimatedSeries'' episode, "New Kids in Town", Brainiac is seen falling into the sun after his attempted escape was thwarted by young Clark Kent, aided by ''WesternAnimation/LegionOfSuperHeroes'' members Saturn Girl, Cosmic Boy, and Chameleon Boy.* In ''WesternAnimation/EarthwormJim'', Jim, Peter Puppy, and their next door neighbor flew straight through the sun, surviving only by using SPF 1 Million.* The original ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'' series has two examples:** After humanity is duped into thinking they're really the bad guys, the Autobots are forced to leave Earth and go back to Cybertron. But Megatron reprograms the ship the carry them into the sun instead. He must have forgotten Cosmos turned into a flying saucer, who saved them with a giant energy net.** The Quintessons revive Optimus Prime as a zombie to destroy the Transformers, but his original personality starts to resurface, and he launches himself to the sun in a spaceship to stop their plot (he didn't get there, though his eventual return was CutShort).* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/EekTheCat'' had the [[ShowWithinAShow Squishy Bearz]] take a ride to Jupiter in a rocket built by Professor Wiggly. Before lift-off, the Professor points to a comically large switch and warns them the switch must remain in the position marked "Jupiter" and not the other position, marked "Sun". One of the Squishy Bearz [[LampshadeHanging asks why]] he [[InventionalWisdom built the switch in the first place]], and the Professor exclaims [[HandWave they're not sophisticated enough to understand]]. HilarityEnsues.* This is how WesternAnimation/WordGirl actually destroys Mr. Big's Lexonite machine at the end of the episode "[=WordGirl=] Makes a Mistake."* Happens to the Amoeba Boys at the end of the pilot episode of ''WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls''.* The "Best Spaceship Ever" skit from ''WesternAnimation/RobotChicken'' has a kid dream up of a happy spaceship to put his abusive father in and use it to drive said father into the sun.* One ''WesternAnimation/DCNation'' short has Bizarro taking over Superman's duties. When a villain attacks, Bizarro thinks that Superman would hurl the villain into the sun. Since he's supposed to do the opposite, he decides that he'll hurl ''the sun'' into ''the villain.'' It, uh, doesn't quite work...Turns out it's kind of hard to grab the sun.* On ''WesternAnimation/OscarsOrchestra'' episode beings InMediasRes with the heroes captured and shoved in a sun-bound rocket.* ''WesternAnimation/GolanTheInsatiable'' once [[DoesNotKnowHisOwnStrength accidentally]] threw an old man into the sun when he only meant for the man to tackle a nearby pigeon.* In the ''WesternAnimation/MonstersVsAliens2013'' episode "Educational Television", Sqweep's portable alien TV becomes so infuriated by B.O.B.'s neverending torrent of stupidity that it attempts to do this to the planet.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Real Life]]* Some scientists are considering this as a viable means of getting rid of nuclear waste. The actual amount of radioactive waste is relatively small, and by using a mass driver can be easily accelerated up to 30 km/s. Point this in the opposite direction of Earth's orbital velocity, and the waste will just fall into the Sun (which is already incredibly radioactive). Alternatively, point it the other way, and it'll escape the Solar System. The problems include this being very expensive - sending stuff out of Earth's gravity well costs a lot of money even when it's just a few people and their life-support supplies, never mind thousands of tons of solid waste per year - and extremely risky. One small error, and it's raining plutonium in the opposite hemisphere.** It's been noted that once orbital elevator technology (which would make delivering cargo into space safe and relatively cheap) is perfected, using the sun (or for that matter, anywhere that's not Earth) as disposal area for nuclear waste really would be viable. Though we're also getting better at ''recycling'' nuclear waste so maybe it'll be unnecessary by the time we're actually capable of doing it.* We are just about starting to get to the point where we actually can have a space probe reach the sun. As [[http://www.smartplanet.com/people/blog/pure-genius/solar-probe-first-mission-to-sun-scheduled-for-2018/5748/ the leading scientist behind the project explains,]] this is an extremely difficult process mainly due to the need to slow down the orbital momentum this probe has from being launched from Earth and involves using the gravity of Venus to slow the probe down in a process of seven approaches to Venus over a period of six years.* May have been subverted by KOI 55.01 and KOI 55.02, two extrasolar planets thought to orbit the hot B subdwarf star KIC 05807616. Controversially, it's been hypothesized that these planets were engulfed by their star during its prior red giant phase, but actually ''survived'' this solar bath, to re-emerge when KIC 05807616 shed its outer surface and became a subdwarf.* Scientists have theorized that this might happen to the Earth one day: when the sun becomes a red giant it'll lose enough mass for the Earth to move away and not simply [[PlanetEater be consumed]], however the new orbit could decay and as a result plummet into our dying star. [[/folder]]----